Thursday, July 2, 2026
ADVT 
National

759 COVID19 cases for Wednesday

Darpan News Desk , 22 Sep, 2021 03:22 PM
  • 759 COVID19 cases for Wednesday

As of Wednesday, Sept. 22, 2021, 87.1% (4,038,966) of eligible people 12 and older in B.C. have received their first dose of COVID-19 vaccine and 79.7% (3,692,922) received their second dose.

In addition, 87.7% (3,792,240) of all eligible adults in B.C. have received their first dose and 80.5% (3,482,742) received their second dose.

B.C. is reporting 759 new cases of COVID-19, including 25 epi-linked cases, for a total of 180,937 cases in the province.

There are 5,458 active cases of COVID-19 in the province and 173,215 people who tested positive have recovered. Of the active cases, 324 individuals are in hospital and 157 are in intensive care. The remaining people are recovering at home in self-isolation.

Note: Intensive care numbers are a subset of the total in hospital. They are not in addition to the number of people in hospital.

The new/active cases include:

  • 214 new cases in Fraser Health
    • Total active cases: 1,734
  • 101 new cases in Vancouver Coastal Health
    • Total active cases: 877
  • 233 new cases in Interior Health
    • Total active cases: 1,223
  • 129 new cases in Northern Health
    • Total active cases: 943
  • 79 new cases in Island Health
    • Total active cases: 636
  • three new cases of people who reside outside of Canada
    • Total active cases: 45

In the past 24 hours, 10 new deaths have been reported, for an overall total of 1,910.

The new deaths include:

  • Fraser Health: seven
  • Vancouver Coastal Health: two
  • Island Health: one

There has been one new health-care facility outbreak at Sunset Manor (Fraser Health), for a total of 23 active outbreaks, including:

  • long-term care: Northcrest Care Centre, Westminster House, Menno Terrace East (Fraser Health), Arbutus Care Centre, Louis Brier Home and Hospital (Vancouver Coastal Health), Village at Mill Creek – second floor, Cottonwoods Care Centre, Brookhaven Care Centre, Spring Valley Care Centre, Kamloops Seniors Village, Hillside Village, The Hamlets at Westsyde, Joseph Creek Care Village, Overlander (Interior Health), Jubilee Lodge (Northern Health) and Victoria Chinatown Care Centre (Island Health)
  • acute care: Chilliwack General Hospital (Fraser Health), Fort St. John Hospital (Northern Health) and Kootenay Boundary Regional Hospital (Interior Health)
  • assisted or independent living: Sunset Manor (Fraser Health), David Lloyd Jones, Sun Pointe Village and Hardy View Lodge (Interior Health)

MORE National ARTICLES

Nova Scotia shooting leaves many unanswered questions regarding communication with the public

Nova Scotia shooting leaves many unanswered questions regarding communication with the public
As of Wednesday, 23 people, including denturist Gabriel Wortman 51, were confirmed to have been killed in Canada’s worst-ever mass shooting. RCMP continues to investigate the weekend mass shooting by gunman Wortman while a series of official communications about the rampage have raised questions about effectiveness and clarity surrounding the incident. 

Nova Scotia shooting leaves many unanswered questions regarding communication with the public

Offers of COVID-19 financial aid from province not enough for Vancouver: mayor

Offers of COVID-19 financial aid from province not enough for Vancouver: mayor
Vancouver's mayor says the financial help being offered by the B.C. government is a "poison chalice" because of the terms it would impose on the city. Kennedy Stewart says borrowing money from the province would saddle Vancouver with a massive deficit that would result in deep service cuts or large property tax increases in the future.    

Offers of COVID-19 financial aid from province not enough for Vancouver: mayor

Horgan tells workers stay home if sick after COVID-19 outbreak at chicken plant

Horgan tells workers stay home if sick after COVID-19 outbreak at chicken plant
B.C. Premier John Horgan says people who are sick must stay away from work after an outbreak of COVID-19 at a chicken processing plant in Vancouver. Horgan said Wednesday workers should not go to work when they are sick because they fear losing wages, and that he was planning a meeting with Labour Minister Harry Bains and WorkSafe BC officials to discuss sick pay provisions.

Horgan tells workers stay home if sick after COVID-19 outbreak at chicken plant

Search for missing B.C. woman prompts homicide fears, second death

Search for missing B.C. woman prompts homicide fears, second death
Police are releasing more details about a British Columbia woman they fear may be the victim of a homicide. Metro Vancouver's Integrated Homicide Investigation Team says 45-year-old April Parisian was last heard from on March 28 and was declared missing earlier this month.

Search for missing B.C. woman prompts homicide fears, second death

Reports of hate crimes are up in Vancouver: police

Reports of hate crimes are up in Vancouver: police
An assault on a 92-year-old Asian man with dementia in Vancouver is being investigated as a hate crime and police say they have recently noticed an increase in reports of hate-motivated incidents. Vancouver police say the man has "severe dementia" and wandered into a convenience store on March 13 when another man yelled racist remarks that included comments about COVID-19.    

Reports of hate crimes are up in Vancouver: police

More signs COVID-19 is slowing in Canada; students to get federal help

More signs COVID-19 is slowing in Canada; students to get federal help
Chief Public Health Officer Dr. Theresa Tam said Canada was making progress in slowing the epidemic but warned against letting down its guard. The focus, Tam said, must be placed on stopping outbreaks in places like seniors homes and in other places where vulnerable populations live together in close quarters. How exactly Canada gets on the road to normalization will largely depend on the provinces, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said on Wednesday. However, the closure of the Canada-U.S. border will stay in place until May 21st at least, he said.

More signs COVID-19 is slowing in Canada; students to get federal help